Although my Casio digital camera was convenient and I used it to make many photos, when it died I had no desire to get another digital camera. Too expensive at the time, for one thing. I was working part-time at the Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation and started to become interested in photography as a hobby. I didn't know anything about cameras so I asked our show's camera operator some questions about what kind of camera I should buy. He recommended I visit the shop used by MBC to buy their equipment and he rang up the owner to tell them I was coming.
When I got to the shop, I introduced myself and told the owner I was looking for a Nikon SLR and I had a budget of 500,000 Won. He took an F55 kit down off the shelf and said it would be suitable. I handed over my 500,000 Won and got a little change back.
The camera wasn't cheap, but I felt like a professional! It had modes! It had manual controls! It was large! Compared to a point and shoot, anyway. It was plastic-fantastic but it was silver and shiny and had a nice 28-80 zoom lens.
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2002? 2003? Still one of my best selfies, I think. |
I made lots and lots of pictures with this camera and lens and later bought a cheap 70-300 zoom to expand my kit. Most of the pictures I made were terrible and have long disappeared. but I can think of a few that weren't too bad that I can't find now. One was of students running towards me on my school's sports day. Maybe it's hiding on my hard drive somewhere with some random file name and no metadata.
Here are a few photos that I made with the camera:
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The camera operator who helped me buy my first proper camera. |
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A friend of mine took this picture of me with the F55 and 70-300 lens hanging around my neck. |
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That friend with his Leica M7 |
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Accompanied by my missus and his missus |
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My landlady's granddaughters. |
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My landlady's dog |
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A picnic with a class of adult learners. |
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This interesting fellow showed up at my school one day day and was explaining to anyone he saw in the schoolyard that he was an inventor but the government and large companies were stealing his ideas. |
I was happy enough with the F55 for a couple of years but decided that I needed more advanced features like spot metering. And it was about that time that Nikon released the D70 digital camera. So I bought myself one of those and never/rarely used the F55 after. I can't remember what I did with that camera. Oh, yes I can. I started working at a university a year or so later and donated it to the school's film camera club.
But I didn't give up film! Soon after buying the D70 I got myself another film camera. More later . . .
These double-digit Nikon SLRs from that era are all decent. Not brilliant, but decent, and a great starter camera today.
ReplyDeleteAnd, as a bonus, they're not 'cool' so the prices haven't gone sky high.
DeleteThat is a good selfie!
ReplyDeleteI find the most annoying thing about those older cameras are the non-standard batteries. Non-standard and expensive.
Thanks very much. I know what you mean about the batteries. My Nikon F6 takes CR123 batteries. I can find them easily online, but if they die while out and about I'm buggered. The good thing about digital cameras is that they all use rechargeable batteries.
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